Diana Kelley, executive security advisor at IBM Security, says that up until now, IBM has been teaching the IBM Watson platform to understand the language of cybersecurity. In this next phase, Kelley says, IBM is employing Watson to identify malware as well as identify suspicious behavior indicative of a security breach. As this beta program progresses, Kelley says, Watson uses the information it discovers to further its IT security education.

“Watson can now learn for itself,” says Kelley.

By eliminating many of the rote functions associated with IT security, Kelley says IT security professionals should be able to spend more time remediating vulnerabilities.

Kelley notes that there are over 1.5 million open IT security positions that IT organizations have little to no hope of ever filling. Advances in cognitive computing will equip IT organizations better to counter cybersecurity attacks that make use of bots and other automation tools to launch attacks at unprecedented levels of scale.

Obviously, it’s only a matter of time before cognitive computing platforms such as Watson start to automate much of the remediation process as well. But in the meantime, IT security professionals should take comfort in the fact that they will soon be able to spend a lot more time fixing issues than trying to discover them.

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